Theater Review: The Broadway Revival of "Sunset Boulevard" Assaults the Senses
Director Jamie Lloyd's loud and brash revival is all sound and fury, signifying nothing.
Director Jamie Lloyd's loud and brash revival is all sound and fury, signifying nothing.
This is a well-honed, mostly successful script about the difficulties of making human connections -- a drama about seizing the day.
The script is an experiment, a (sometimes) witty lecture on language. But it doesn't work dramatically.
William A. Everett's book is well-researched but based on a problematic premise.
Tony winning playwright Joe DiPietro does a commendable job of dramatizing the true-life confrontation between Margaret Chase Smith and Joseph McCarthy while they were both serving in the Un…
"Leopoldstadt" is one of Tom Stoppard's most heartfelt and expansive works, its poignant storyline inspired by events in his own life.
As the run continues, the torrent of gags will probably settle into place and proper narrative rhythms emerge. But for now, the game's aground.
Reviews of three shows seen during a trip to Ireland and England -- Shakespeare at London's Globe and "Dublin Oldschool" and "Riverdance" in Dublin.
There's plenty of potential in Tony Meneses' script about men sharing their inner lives with other men, but it is filled with too many silent types.
"Library Lion," wonderfully staged by Adam Theater, marks the arrival of a new and welcome addition to the Boston theater scene.
Is it possible for an outstanding actress to achieve similar heights as a playwright? The answer is yes, but with reservations.
Cinematic in inspiration, Diane Paulus's direction whips up terse bursts of adolescent energy, tapping into a cocky hunger for self-destructive combat.
"It's not just some generic 'evil'Â "The Arsonists" protests, it is willful blindness to fascist and authoritarian agendas. Denial and hiding behind "bourgeois" comfort is the theme."
This "Mattress" is all about Sutton Foster. And that's a good thing.
Through a series of around 10 scenes, spanning over a decade, "Wish You Were Here" looks at political oppression through the domestic lens of lost love and friendships.
By Debra Cash This, my friends, is what a capital D Diva looks like. The Queen of Versailles Music and lyrics by Stephen Schwartz, book by Lindsey Ferrentino, based on Lauren Greenfield's do…
This production brings the Peterborough Players back in line with their own best traditions: entertaining, thoughtful, delightfully irreverent.
A relaxed, humane kindness shines through this staging of Shakespeare's hymn to reconciliation.
Arlekin Players Theatre's "The Dybbuk" may not convince you of the supernatural, but director Igor Golyak is a magician.
This musical succeeds, at least in part, because it dares to shine a light on parts of our lives that we don't like to talk about.
The creators of "Gatsby" have fashioned some creative ways to make the story seem more contemporary. None of that, however, seems enough to justify the enormous amount of energy and talent t…
The Lyric Stage Company's production of David Henry Hwang's Obie award-winning play is serviceably absorbing.
Despite its undeniable fun, Christopher Durang's play feels somewhat quaint a decade or so since it was written.
The excellent ensemble of Huntington Theatre Company actors, fittingly, work well as a team.
The script is representative of the pitfalls of current theatrical minimalism -- less can so easily be less.